wfiu.indiana.edu

Transcription

wfiu.indiana.edu
October
2006
W IU
wfiu.indiana.edu
Also this month:
• K is for Köchel
• Artist of the Month: Sylvia McNair
Photo: Alan Klein
• Profile:
Stephen L. Ferguson
• Intelligence Squared
• A Time to Heal
. . . and more!
Radio Lab hosts Robert Krulwich and Jad Abumrad
October 2006
Vol. 54, No­­­­­­. 10
Directions in Sound (USPS314900) is published each month
by the Indiana University Radio
and Television Services, 1229
East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN
47405-5501
telephone: 812-855-6114 or
e-mail: [email protected]
web site: wfiu.indiana.edu
Periodical postage paid at
Bloomington, IN
POSTMASTER
Send address changes to:
WFIU Membership Department
Radio & TV Center
Indiana University
1229 East 7th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-5501
WFIU is licensed to the Trustees of
Indiana University, and operated
by Indiana University Radio and
Television Services.
Perry Metz—Executive Director, Radio and Television Services
Christina Kuzmych—Station Manager/Program Director
Sharon Beikman—Broadcast Systems Manager, Traffic
Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz Director
Cary Boyce—Operations Director
Brian Cox—Underwriting Associate
Don Glass—Volunteer Producer/
A Moment of Science®
Milton Hamburger—Art Director
Brad Howard—Director of Engineering and Operations
David Brent Johnson—Producer/
Systems Coordinator
LuAnn Johnson—Web Content Developer/Program Liaison
Yaël Ksander—Producer/Announcer
Emily Blacklin McCord—Radio Resources Coordinator
Patrick McAleer—Underwriting Associate
Virginia Metzger—Chief Financial Officer
Will Murphy—News Director
Michael Paskash—Studio Engineer and Technical Producer
Adam Schwartz—Editor,
Directions In Sound, News & Promotions Assistant
Adam Schweigert—Interim Music Director
John Shelton—Assistant Chief Engineer of Radio
Michael Toler—Webmaster
George Walker—Producer/On-Air Broadcast Director
Judith Witt—Development Director, Major & Planned Giving
Scott Witzke—Marketing Director
Marianne Woodruff—
Underwriting Sales Manager
Eva Zogorski—Membership Director
Announcers: Ann Corrigan, Adam
Ragusea, Henry Schilb, Jake
Sentgeorge, David Wood
Broadcast Assistant: Phyllis Chen
Harmonia Scriptwriters:
Keith Collins, Catherine Hawkes, Bernard Gordillo
Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Jenny Kander, Patrick
O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Steve
Sanders, Sarah Stevens, Michael
Wilkerson, Bob Zaltsberg
Membership Staff: Laura Grannan,
Joan Padawan
Movie Reviewer: Peter Noble-Kuchera
Music Assistants: Randy Goldberg,
Adam McCord, Mona
Seghatoleslami
News Assistants: Lauren Algee, Pam
Baccam, Joice Biazoto, Catherine
Hageman, Adam Ragusea, Jennifer
Salts
Production Assistant: Paul Messing
Questions or Comments?
Programming, Policies, or this Guide: If you have any questions about something you heard on the radio, station policies or this programming guide, call
Christina Kuzmych, Station Manager/Program Director, at (812) 855-1357, or
email her at [email protected].
Listener Response: If you wish only to leave a comment, please feel free
to call our Listener Response Line any time of the day at (812) 856-5352.
You can also email us at [email protected]. If you wish to send a letter, the
address is WFIU, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7th Street, Indiana University,
Bloomington, IN 47405-5501.
Membership: WFIU appreciates and depends on our members. The membership staff is on hand Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to
answer questions. Want to begin or renew your membership? Changing addresses? Haven’t received the thank-you gift you requested? Questions about
the MemberCard? Want to send a complimentary copy of Directions in Sound
to a friend? Call (812) 855-6114 or toll free at 800-662-3311.
Underwriting: For information on how your business can underwrite
particular programs on WFIU, call (800) 662-3311.
Radio Lab
October 29
“Space”
Sundays at 4 p.m.
America took a bold step in conquering
outer space when it landed a man on the
moon in 1969. But since then, the romance of space exploration has been tempered by reality. We chart the path from
then to now. We begin with Ann Druyan,
widow of Carl Sagan, with a story about
the Voyager expedition, true love, and the
golden record that travels through space.
For a dose of reality, astrophysicist Neil
de Grasse Tyson explains the Coepernican
Principle and just how insignificant we are.
Radio Lab explores big ideas in science (and beyond) through
conversation, storytelling and sound. Each episode is a sonic
joyride through a different universe of ideas. Produced by New
York public radio WNYC, the series is designed for listeners who
are skeptical but retain their sense of wonder, who want to learn
while being moved and surprised.
October 1
“Detective Stories”
Forensics, archeology, genealogy, and genetics are devoted to figuring out what really happened. In this hour, we hear surprising
stories of playing detective and finding that what really happened
in the past is not always what you’d expect. We start at a trash
dump in Egypt, where we find Jesus, Satan, sissies, and porn.
Next, the mystery of why hundreds of old letters written to the
same woman were discovered on the side of Route 101. Lastly,
a blood sampling tour of Asia reveals a prolific baby-maker and
potentially a world conqueror.
October 8
“Musical Language”
Making Cities Work
What is music? How does it work? Why does it move us? Why
are some people better at it than others? We examine the line
between language and music, how the brain processes sound, and
we meet a composer who uses computers to capture the musical
DNA of dead composers in order to create new work. We also reimagine the disastrous 1913 debut of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring,
through the lens of modern neurology.
Sundays, October 1 and 8, 8 p.m.
October 15
“Morality”
Where does our sense of right and wrong come from? We peer
inside the brains of people contemplating moral dilemmas, watch
chimps at a primate research center share blackberries, observe
a playgroup of three-year-olds fighting over toys, and tour the
country’s first penitentiary, Eastern State Prison. Also, the story
of land grabbing, indentured servitude, and slum lording in the
fourth grade.
October 22
“Where Am I?”
Mind and body are in constant communication (neuroscientists
call this the brain-body loop), but the loop can get out-of-sync,
even broken. In this hour, stories of people whose brains and
bodies have lost each other. We begin with a century-old mystery:
why do many amputees still feel their missing limbs? We speak
with a neuroscientist who solved the problem with a magician’s
trick: an optical illusion. We continue with the story of a butcher
who suddenly lost his entire sense of touch, and how, after many
years, he managed to grow a new sense. And we hear from pilots
who lose consciousness and suffer out-of-body experiences while
flying fighter jets.
Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at
(812) 855-1357, or by sending an email to [email protected].
Page / Directions in Sound / October 2006
Making Cities Work was originally
scheduled to be broadcast in September
but was pre-empted for the live broadcast
of the Ted Koppel Town Meeting, The
Price of Security.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
It is projected that in
the next fifty years,
two-thirds of humanity will live in cities.
A major challenge
will be to minimize
poverty, crime, and
urban alienation
while improving access to basic services
Deyan Sudjic
and a better quality
of life. In this two-part documentary from
The Changing World, architecture critic
Devan Sudjic looks at cutting-edge solutions for transportation and housing as
well as ways of making cities cleaner and
more livable.
Sudjic travels to the U.N.’s World
Urban Forum in Vancouver, which brings
together the best thinking on creating a
better future for cities. “Making Cities
Work” examines the lessons learned from
New Orleans in the months after the
flooding, and looks at Dubai, an oil-rich
but population-poor state that is creating
a vast modern city. Sudjic goes on to look
at Mumbai’s attempts to plan its way out
of traffic gridlock, and then at the squatter areas of Istanbul where the debate is
whether cheap slum housing is worth saving, or whether it is an illegal blemish that
should be demolished and replaced.
The Changing World The Jewish New
“Inside the World of Google”
Year: A Time to
October 15, 8 p.m.
Heal
Host Mike Embley goes behind the scenes
of Google, examining the world’s view
of the company and the implications of
its meteoric rise. He visits Googleplex in
Mountain View, California, where he tours
the mega-corporation which still retains its
small company ethos and original philosophy.
Embley also speaks to Google’s competitors, Microsoft and Yahoo, and to its
critics. Is there a downside to so many
computer users being dependent on one
search engine? In France, Google’s plans
to digitize fifteen million books from international libraries have provoked cries of
cultural imperialism. Google’s philosophy
is “not to do evil,” but, given the company’s compliance with China’s censorship
policies, there is question whether that is a
realistic goal.
“The Communications Revolution”
Part I – October 22, 8 p.m.
Part II – October 29, 8 p.m.
Torin Douglas investigates the vast changes under way in communications. Today,
there are fourteen different distribution
platforms available, audiences are interacting more and more, broadband is growing
fast, multi-channel TV is the norm, and
mobile phones do almost everything. But
technologies are incompatible, and fiftyyear-old science is sitting alongside the
cutting edge. Add in market idiosyncrasies,
and it’s clear why producers and consumers are confused.
People are getting information on demand from a variety of sources: campaign
groups, company and personal Web sites,
news outlets, blogs, wikis, and more. Who
is moderating and filtering the content,
and how do users know it’s true? Will
they get better, more detailed and more
accurate information in the future, or the
opposite? As Douglas points out, there is
evidence now that technologies are beginning to converge. How the dust will settle
is unknown, as organizations such as the
BBC are working to “future-proof” themselves. This program looks at how they’re
doing it and what the future might look
like.
Sunday, October 1, 9 p.m.
A Time to Heal is an exploration of one of
the salient themes of the Jewish New Year.
It affirms the high holidays as a time to
soothe troubled relationships with family
and friends; a time to renew commitments
to ease world conflicts; and an opportunity
to repair the torn parts of one’s self.
National
Book Award
winner Sherwin
Nuland, M.D.
talks about his
new book on
twelfth century doctor and
philosopher
Maimonides;
trumpeter Frank
Sherwin Nuland
London of the
music group
Klezmatics takes us back to the words
and folk wisdom of Woody Guthrie;
Fulbright scholar Jessica Alpert (who is
pursuing her doctorate in IU’s Department
of History) travels to Central America to
hear the real life stories of the dwindling
Salvadoran Jewish community struggling
with the ghosts of its past; Rabbi Naomi
Levy explores healing the body and the
rifts of family life; filmmaker Lisa Leeman
talks about her new documentary, “Out of
Faith,” and San Francisco area storyteller
Joel Ben Izzy spins the tales of the Hasidic
masters for an audience of today.
Hosted by actor Arye Gross.
Joel Ben Izzy
Arye Gross
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Intelligence Squared K is for Köchel: The Japan’s Pop Power
This new series of provocative and
Story Behind Those Sunday, October 22, 9 p.m.
informative live debates uses Oxford-style
debating—one sharply-framed motion,
Mozart Numbers
For decades, the United States has been the
one moderator, three advocates for the
motion and three against.
The goal of the series is to raise the
level of public discourse on our most challenging issues by providing a forum for
intelligent discussion, grounded in facts
and informed by reasoned analysis. The
programs seek to transcend the toxically
emotional and the reflexively ideological—
encouraging recognition that the opposing
side has intellectually respectable views.
A well-known moderator keeps the
proceedings orderly. Each side attempts to
persuade the audience to vote their way.
This adversarial context is electric, adding
drama and excitement.
Sunday, October 8, 9 p.m.
“We must tolerate a nuclear Iran.”
Robert Siegel, a senior host of All Things
Considered, is the moderator. Speakers
for the motion: George Perkovich, Karim
Sadjadpour, and Sanam Vakil. Speakers
against the motion: Patrick Clawson,
Reuel Marc Gerecht, and William Kristol
Robert Siegel
George Perkovich
Sunday, October 29, 9 p.m.
“Freedom of expression must include the
license to offend.”
Jeffrey Toobin, staff writer at The New
Yorker and a senior legal analyst for CNN
Worldwide, moderates.
Speakers for the motion:
Philip Gourevitch,
Christopher Hitchens,
and Signe Wilkinson.
Speakers against the
motion: Daisy Khan,
Mari Matsuda, and
David Cesarani.
Jeffrey Toobin
Page / Directions in Sound / October 2006
Sunday, October 15, 9 p.m.
When a piece by Mozart is played on
WFIU, it might be identified with a
“Köchel number.” Makes you wonder,
just what are those numbers and who is
Köchel?
Ludwig Ritter von Köchel was an amateur musician in 19th century Austria who
set out to determine every composition
Mozart wrote and arrange them by date.
Köchel’s catalog, published in 1862, was
the first systematic index of any European
composer’s music. It ran from a tiny childhood harpsichord piece of Mozart’s, K. 1,
up to the Requiem Mozart was working
on at the time of his death, K. 626.
Köchel got an impressive amount right,
but not everything. He assigned numbers
to a few pieces that weren’t really by
Mozart; he left out a few pieces that really
are; and more important, not every work
was (or could be) dated correctly.
In this program, father and daughter
team of Mozart scholar Neal Zaslaw and
Sarah Zaslaw of
Georgia Public
Broadcasting
explore how
Köchel got
as close as he
did and what
we know now
that Köchel did
not. Along the
way, they look
at some of the
Neal Zaslaw
myths of genius
and how Mozart
really composed, the ways later scholars
tinkered with Köchel’s chronology, the formula connecting K numbers to Mozart’s
age, modern forensic Mozart sleuth work
from paper dating to handwriting analysis,
and plans for the forthcoming new Köchel
catalog. In addition, there’s plenty of what
makes it all matter: Mozart’s music.
dominant exporter of pop culture. In the
twenty-first century, it has a powerful new
competitor: Japan. Young people across
the globe watch anime, read manga comic
books from right to left, listen to J-pop
music, and play with Japanese toys and
video games.
This American Radio Works documentary asks: What’s so cool about Japan?
Will the ancient nation rise again, this time
as the world’s leading exporter of fantasy?
Japan’s Pop Power is an entertaining journey from Tokyo to Middle America.
J-pop singer Aiko
The Radio Reader
with Dick Estell
“Lady on the Hill”
by Howard E. Covington, Jr.
Begins Tuesday, October 31
Number of episodes: 22
The Biltmore Estate, known as the Lady
on the Hill, is the epitome of Gilded Age
splendor, the largest private home ever
built in the United States. The French
château is graced with more than 50,000
priceless furnishings and objects d’art, set
in an enchanting rural paradise, and designed by America’s foremost nineteenthcentury landscape architect. A National
Historic Landmark, George Vanderbilt’s
dream home welcomes visitors to experience its glorious past as well as its exciting
future.
“Lady on the Hill” tells the inspiring story of the thirty-five year effort to
restore this fading beauty in Asheville,
North Carolina to her former glory—all
without a penny of government funding or
outside foundation grants. This is a lively
tale of eccentric upper-crust characters,
seemingly insurmountable obstacles, and
one man’s determination, innovation, loyalty, and stubborn persistence to succeed
against the odds.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Artist of the Month:
Sylvia McNair
by Adam P Schweigert
This month,
WFIU celebrates
the return to
Bloomington of
soprano Sylvia
McNair, one of
the most recent
additions to the
faculty of the IU
Jacobs School of
Music.
A native
of Mansfield,
Sylvia McNair
Ohio, McNair
received her Masters degree from IU in
1983 before pursuing a storied performing
career in which she has released more
than seventy recordings and appeared as a
regular soloist with the leading orchestras
and opera houses in America, Europe, and
Asia.
Although she has been away from
Bloomington for nearly twenty-five
years, McNair has maintained a close
relationship with the IU Jacobs School of
Music, serving as the school’s executive
advisor for outreach since 2001. She’s
pleased to be returning to Bloomington,
recently joking that her career has come
full circle.
“I arrived [at IU] in a U-Haul van in
August of 1978, and now I’m going to
arrive in a U-Haul van in August of ’06,”
she said. “It just feels like the maturing
of a relationship that began twenty-eight
years ago, and I hope it will continue into
the future.”
This month, WFIU is pleased to
welcome home Sylvia McNair by featuring
a number of her outstanding commercial
recordings.
Sunday, October 1st at 11:25 a.m.
RAVEL—Shéhérazade with Seiji Ozawa
and the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Wednesday, October 11th at 11:00 a.m.
POULENC—Three Songs with pianist
Roger Vignoles.
Thursday, October 12th at 7:07 p.m.
PURCELL—Part II from The Echoing
Air with Christopher Hogwood and the
Academy of Ancient Music.
Tuesday, October 17th at 3:07 p.m.
GRIEG—“Solveig’s Song” from Peer
Gynt with Jeffrey Tate and the Berlin
Philharmonic.
Wednesday, October 18th at 10:08 p.m.
BEETHOVEN—Egmont, Op. 84 with
narrator Will Quadflieg and Kurt Masur
and the New York Philharmonic.
Friday, October 20th at 11:00 a.m.
MOZART—“Porgi, amor” from The
Marriage of Figaro with Neville Marriner
and the Academy of St. Martin-in-theFields.
Friday, October 20th at 10:12 p.m.
Sylvia McNair performs selections
from the Great American Songbook on
Afterglow with David Brent Johnson.
Wednesday, October 25th at 7:07 p.m.
MOZART—Concert Aria “Ch’io mi
scordi di te? . . . Non temer, amato bene,”
K. 505 with pianist Alfred Brendel and
Neville Marriner and the Academy of St.
Martin-in-the-Fields.
Friday, October 27th at 10:00 a.m.
FAURE—Three Songs with pianist Roger
Vignoles.
Monday, October 30th at 3:07 p.m.
MOZART—Concert Aria “Misera,
dove son! . . . Ah! non son io che parlo,”
K. 369; with Neville Marriner and the
Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields.
Jazz with
Bob Parlocha
debuts
The rich, elegant voice of nationally
known jazz expert Bob Parlocha comes to
WFIU this month with the debut of Jazz
with Bob Parlocha Saturdays at midnight.
(The new program replaces Portraits in
Blue, which has ceased production.) It will
run an additional hour than its predecessor, airing until 2 a.m.
Host Bob Parlocha combines a
creative, engaging musical mix and a
friendly conversational rapport, keeping
talk to a minimum and letting the music
be the focal
point of the
program. Music
selections come
from Parlocha’s
personal record
library of more
than 60,000
records and
CDs.
A former
program director and host of
Bob Parlocha
KJAZ in San
Francisco, Parlocha is a musician, broadcaster, record producer, and a spokesman for the genre. As a radio producer,
Parlocha has developed many interesting
specialty shows, including the “Black
Masters” series, “Latin Jazz,” and “On
The Scene,” which spotlights Bay Area
musicians in live performance.
Parlocha has also produced a number
of albums, including singer Laurie Antonioli’s “Soul Eyes” on Catero Records. He
engineered the late Martha Young’s “Live
at Bajone’s” album on the Carnelian label,
and an album for pianist Steve Cohn.
Parlocha frequently donates his time
to jazz causes, especially those aiding Bay
Area musicians, and delights in identifying
and developing younger air talent. He still
enjoys playing saxophone and sharing his
talents with Bay Area audiences.
Monday, October 2nd at 9:00 a.m.
RACHMANINOFF—“Vocalise” (Op.
34, No. 14) with David Zinman and the
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Featured Classical
Recordings
Selected by Adam P Schweigert
Selections from each week’s featured recording can be heard at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Monday; 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday;
10 a.m. and 10 p.m. Wednesday; 3 p.m.
Thursday; and 11:30 a.m. Saturday.
October 2nd – 7th
Veronique Gens: Tragédiennes
(Virgin Classics 00946 346762 2 9)
Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe Rousset/
Les Talens Lyriques
Soprano
Veronique
Gens
presents a
recital of
works drawn
from the early
French opera,
specifically
the tragédies
lyriques of the late 17th century. Gens
assumes the role of tragic heroines
from operas by Lully, Rameau, Leclair,
Gluck, and others. Her voice is full of
color, highlighting the subtle nuances
of the text setting while putting on a
suitably dramatic show. She is urged on
by fiery playing from period instrument
ensemble Les Talens Lyriques and director
Christophe Rousset.
October 9th – 14th
Martha Argerich and Friends: Live from
the Lugano Festival 2005
(EMI Classics 3 58472 2)
Martha Argerich, p. et al.
An all-star cast including fellow pianists
Piotr Anderszewski, Nicholas Angelich,
Gabriel Montero, and Sergio Tiempo,
brothers violinist Renaud and cellist
Gautier Capuçon, violist Lida Chen, and
cellists Mark Drobinsky and Mischa
Maisky joins Martha Argerich for this
three-disc collection of chamber music
recorded at the 2005 Lugano Festival. The
results will make you glad that a phenomenal talent like Argerich surrounds herself
with such a talented group of friends.
Page / Directions in Sound / October 2006
by David Brent Johnson
Hannes Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
German trumpeter Hannes Läubin presents a recital of works by eight French
composers from the turn of the 20th
century, some you’ve probably heard of
(Gaubert and Saint-Saens) and several
others you probably haven’t (Jeanine
Rueff, Guillaume Balay). The works were
all written as graduation test pieces for
the Paris Conservatory. They’re suitably
flashy and difficult, and Läubin makes
quick work of them, making this disc an
enjoyable snapshot of Parisian musical life
at the time.
October 23 – 28
Mozart: Rare Choral Works
(Paraclete GDCD 039)
rd
th
Elizabeth C. Patterson/Gloria Dei Cantores
and Richard K. Pugsley/Vox Caeli Sinfonia
With the
Mozart 250th
birthday
celebration,
2006 has
been the year
of Mozart
recording
projects. This
month choral
ensemble Gloria Dei Cantores adds their
contribution, a two-disc set filled with less
often performed works by Mozart for solo
voices, chorus, and orchestra. If you find
yourself looking for an alternative to yet
another Requiem recording, many of the
works are worth exploring and the performances are vibrant and well recorded.
October 30th – November 4th
The Cries of London
(Harmonia Mundi HMU 907214)
Paul Hillier/Theatre of Voices with Fretwork
Period vocal ensemble Theatre of Voices
and viol consort Fretwork are heard here
in a collection of works dating from the
early 17th century that overlay music for
viol consort with the raucous calls of
town criers, merchants, and tradesmen of
London. The works are often humorous
and at times surprisingly poignant.
Fretwork includes IU faculty member
Wendy Gillespie.
Broadcasts from the
IU Jacobs School of
Music
Jazz Notes
October 16th – 21st
Solos de Concours: French Music for
Trumpet and Piano (Audite 92.521)
For the Love of Kids Parenting
Conference
Saturday, November 18
8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Bloomington Convention Center
Parents spend 365 days a year
raising their children. From time to
time, even the best parents could
use help learning how to do their
very difficult job. They’ll get that
help at the first For the Love of
Kids Positive Practical Parenting
Conference.
The conference is based on the
idea that the best foundation for
raising competent, emotionally
healthy children is built by
focusing on their strengths in an
atmosphere of respect and positive
expectations.
Madelyn Swift, a nationally
acclaimed author, speaker,
and authority on discipline,
family dynamics, and personal
communication, will give the
keynote speech. Swift is president
of Childright, an educational
consulting firm that provides
training to parents and educators.
Breakout sessions will include
local experts speaking on such
topics as discipline, pregnancy,
childhood obesity, Internet safety,
childhood self-esteem, talking with
your kids about sexuality, drugs,
and alcohol, media literacy, and
family finances.
WFIU’s sister station, WTIU, is
hosting the event. The presenting
sponsors are WFIU and the
Herald-Times; the featured
sponsor is Bloomington Hospital.
Tickets are $25 in advance and
$30 at the door. Call 855-5900 to
purchase. For more information,
visit the WTIU Web site at www.
wtiu.indiana.edu.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
As Bobby Troup sang, We’re in the mood
for this October here at WFIU.
OK, so we’re taking liberties. We
don’t recall Troup—composer-lyricist of
“Route 66” and other hits—ever including
Bloomington radio stations in any rendition of “This October.” (Hmm, maybe
Dick Bishop has a bootleg somewhere?)
Anyway, autumn in Indiana can feel like
a Hoagy Carmichael song brought to life
. . . and we’ll have more, much more, on
Hoagy next month.
Our most immediate news is that longtime producer and host Bob Porter has
decided to discontinue Portraits in Blue.
While we’ll miss his authoritative midnight
presentation of the blues, we’re happy to
welcome in his place Late Night Jazz with
Bob Parlocha beginning the first Saturday
evening in October. Late Night Jazz with
Bob Parlocha, featuring a mix of new and
classic jazz, will air from 12 to 2 a.m.,
immediately following Night Lights, our
wide-ranging mid-to-late-20th-century jazz
program.
Features on Night Lights this month
include tenor saxophonist John Gilmore,
who played in charismatic bandleader Sun
Ra’s Arkestra for four decades and made
only a handful of recordings away from
his leader; the year 1959, which brought
us such jazz masterpieces as Kind of Blue,
Mingus Ah Um, and Giant Steps; the husband and wife, piano/vocal duo Dick and
Kiz Harp (Kiz was an Indiana native) who
released only two albums before Kiz died
suddenly at the age of 29; and the experimental 1950s jazz workshop albums of
George Russell and Hal McKusick. Night
Lights airs Saturdays at 11 p.m., and all of
the program’s previously broadcast shows
can be heard at nightlights.indiana.edu.
For those who prefer to catch their
jazz in the daytime, tune in every weekday
afternoon for Joe Bourne’s long-running
and ever popular Just You and Me. In addition to sharing his enthusiasm, favorites,
and expertise with you, Joe likes to feature
local artists and new releases. Keep your
ears open for new music from Diana
Krall (From This Moment On, an album
of standards with the Clayton-Hamilton
Jazz Orchestra), Madeleine Peyroux (Half
the Perfect World, the follow up to her
2004 hit Careless Love), the Dave Holland
Quintet, pianist Jason Moran, saxophonists Branford Marsalis and Kenny Garrett,
Diana Krall
Bill Frisell
BACH—Violin Sonata in f, BWV 1018:
Duo Geminiani
Airs: 10/2 at 7 p.m., 10/3 at 10 a.m., 10/6
at 3 p.m.
MOZART—Mass in c, K. 427; Elisabeth
Marshall and Siân Davies, s.; Kathryn
Leemhuis, ms.; Jordan Bluth, t.; Samuel
Spade, bar.; IU Univ. Singers and Chorale;
William Jon Gray/IU Univ. Orch.
Airs: 10/4 at 10 p.m.
Dave Holland
Madeleine Peyroux
guitarists Pat Metheny and Bill Frisell collaborating, respectively, with pianist Brad
Mehldau and with Ron Carter and Paul
Motian, and much more, including Gladys
Knight’s foray into classic jazz tunes,
Before Me—a salute to her vocal predecessors.
Diana Krall’s new CD, which features
her in a large-ensemble setting, is likely to
show up as well on The Big Bands, hosted
every Friday evening by Joe Bourne at 9
p.m. Madeleine Peyroux’s new CD, featuring covers of Leonard Cohen and Tom
Waits, is definitely showing up on Afterglow, as is the aforementioned Mr. Troup
(a new two-CD compilation of the songwriter singing his own and others’ songs),
along with arranger Gil Evans’ late-1950s
Pacific Jazz recordings and Ben Webster’s
early-1960s classic LP Soulmates. Afterglow airs at 10:05 p.m. on Friday nights,
and you can hear previous editions of the
program at afterglow.indiana.edu. Our
Big Bands/Afterglow bloc is preceded by
Marion McPartland’s Piano Jazz; this
month’s guests include pianists Jon Weber,
John Hicks, and Billy Childs, as well as
Rolling Stones drummer and longtime jazz
fanatic Charlie Watts.
Finally, please be sure to join us for
our WFIU listener reception in the IU Art
Museum atrium on Friday, October 13,
from 7 to 9 p.m. WFIU staff will be on
hand to meet and greet you, and we’ll
have an inviting assortment of beverages
and tasty culinary items as well. Black cat
optional!
SOMERVELL—The Gentle Maid; Brian
Horne, t.; Gary Arvin, p.
Airs: 10/9 at 7 p.m., 10/10 at 10 a.m.,
10/13 at 3 p.m.
WECKMANN—Toccata in d; Elizabeth
Wright, hpsd.
Airs: 10/16 at 7 p.m., 10/17 at 10 a.m.,
10/20 at 3 p.m.
KREISLER—Liebesleid and Liebesfreud;
Emilio Colón/IU Cello Ens.
Airs: 10/23 at 7 p.m., 10/24 at 10 a.m.,
10/27 at 3 p.m.
MOZART—Rondo in a, K. 511; Jonathan
Biss, p.
Airs: 10/30 at 7 p.m., 10/31 at 10 a.m.,
11/3 at 3 p.m.
Public Matters
on the Web
Federal funding for public broadcasting depends on voting in
Congress. National Public Radio,
in association with PBS, has created
Tell Them Public Matters, a Web
site that makes it possible for listeners to share their thoughts on public broadcasting with Congressional
representatives. To learn about how
public broadcasting is funded or to
send a message to Congress, visit
tellthempublicmatters.org or go to
the WFIU Web site: wfiu.indiana.
edu.
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Profiles
Community Events
Sundays at 7 p.m.
WFIU is the media sponsor for the following events. For more information on these
and other activities on the calendar, visit
wfiu.indiana.edu
October 1 – John Harbison
John Harbison is one of America’s most prominent composers. Among his principal works are three string quartets, three
symphonies, three operas, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning
cantata “The Flight Into Egypt.” He has written for every type
of concert performance, ranging from the grandest to the most
intimate, and his works have been performed and recorded by
many of the world’s leading ensembles. In conversation with
Peter Jacobi. (repeat)
October 8 – Anthony Pizzo
Bloomington native Angelo Pizzo teamed up with former Sigma
Nu fraternity brother David Anspaugh to make “Hoosiers”
and “Rudy,” two of the most beloved sports movies of all
time. The pair’s most recent film is a game about soccer, “The
Game of Their Lives.” After living in southern California for
thirty years, Pizzo and his family moved back to Bloomington,
where he pursues new film projects and serves on the board
of the Heartland Film Festival. Pizzo spoke with Peter NobleKuchera. (repeat)
October 15 – Richard Perez
As producing artistic director of the Bloomington Playwright’s
Project, Richard Perez has overseen the production of more
than twenty new full-length plays. He has taught acting and improvisation at Tony Randall’s National Actor’s Theatre in New
York City, Arizona State University, and Theatresports New
York. Perez wrote and performed in a one-man show, “Secret
Things,” staged at the BPP and in New York. He spoke with
Shana Ritter. (repeat)
October 22 – Janis Stockhouse
Janis Stockhouse has directed the band program at Bloomington High School North for two decades. She has held leadership positions in many professional organizations, and was
awarded the Indiana Music Teacher of the Year Award and the
BAAC Arts in Education Award. She is co-author of the book
“Jazzwomen: Conversations with Twenty-one Musicians.”
Sarah Stevens is the host. (repeat)
October 29 – Stephen L. Ferguson
Steve Ferguson is president of the Indiana University Board
of Trustees, chairman of the board of Cook Group Inc., of
Bloomington, and of counsel to the law firm of Ferguson
& Ferguson. He served four terms in the Indiana House of
Representatives from 1967 to 1974. He is active in a number of
IU, community, state, and national organizations, and serves on
the Board of Directors of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce,
Indiana Health Industry Forum, Central Indiana Corporate
Partnership, Inc., and the Indiana Technology Partnership,
among others. He also serves on the Board of Trustees for
the National Endowment for the Humanities. Perry Metz
conducted the interview.
Page / Directions in Sound / October 2006
MemberCard
For a complete listing of more
than 300 membership benefits visit
membercard.com or call toll-free
1-888-727-4411.
Benefits of the month:
Fastimes Indoor Karting
3455 North Harper Road
Indianapolis
317-566-0066
www.ftik.com
Valid for two-for-one races during
October
Ryder Film Series
504 W 4th St
Bloomington
812-339-2002
www.theryder.com
Valid for two-for-one admission
during October.
Restaurant addition:
U-Club Restaurant & Bar
254 North Walnut Street
Bloomington
812-333-2582
www.myuclub.com
Valid any time.
To receive an updated brochure or
to replace a lost brochure, call the
Membership Department at 800-6623311 or 855-6114.
Visit www.membercard.com for a
complete list of benefits
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
50th Annual Walk For the Animals
Sunday, October 1, 2006
1–4 p.m.
Third Street Park
Bloomington
www.monroehumane.org
Each year animal lovers and supporters
band together to collect donations for the
Monroe County Humane Association and
animals in need. This year’s activities include agility and other dog demos, canine
water park, Health and Wellness booths,
low-cost Microchip Clinic, canine games,
Kids Carnival, and more—a true family
event. This is the largest fundraising event
of the year for the MCHA.
Lotus in the Park
Saturday, October 7
12–5:30 p.m.
Third Street Park
Bloomington
www.lotusfest.org
Enjoy a free afternoon of music, art, and
hands-on fun. Activities are great for all
ages, and Bloomingfoods is on hand with
food and drink to keep you fuelled.
Kokomo Community Concert Series
Cardinal Stage Company
Puttin’ on the Hitz
Sunday, October 8, 7:30 p.m.
kokomocommunityconcerts.org
“Unveiling” by Václav Havel
October 19­–21 and 26–28
Rose Firebay at the Waldron Arts Center
A musical journey featuring the best of
songs written by Irving Berlin. Go steppin’
out with our dynamic cast of eight singerdancers plus a quartet of the finest jazz
musicians as they put on their top hat and
white tie and tails underneath the stars of
a Manhattan skyline. With scintillating
choreography, spectacular scenery, and
sophisticated costumes, there’s no business
like show business!
Launched last season with an acclaimed
production of Our Town, The Cardinal
Stage Company returns with a remarkable
comedy by dissident Czech playwright
turned president Václav Havel. “Unveiling”
is Havel’s Obie-award winning comedy
about the absurdity of life in a totalitarian
state. Performances October 19–21 and
26–28 at 7:30 p.m. Matinees on the 21st
and 28th at 2 p.m. Tickets ($16/$13 senior/
student) are available at bloomingtonarts.
info or by calling 812-336-4564.
Jill Behrman Run for the End Zone
Saturday, October 21
8–9:40 a.m. Check in and on-site
registration at Mellencamp Pavilion
9:30 a.m. Warm-up session led by
professional Fitness/Wellness staff
10 a.m. 5K Run and 5K non-competitive
walk begins
10:10 a.m. One Mile Walk begins
Michelle Norris
“Cut and Paste Journalism”
Monday, October 9, 7 p.m.
Whittenberger Auditorium
The IU School of Journalism speaker series
presents Michele Norris, host of NPR’s All
Things Considered.
The former Emmy
and Peabody award
winner has reported for ABC News,
the Washington
Post, the Chicago
Tribune and the
Los Angeles Times.
Michelle Norris
WFIU Listeners’ Reception
Friday, October 13, 7–9 p.m.
IU Art Museum atrium
You’re invited to meet WFIU staff and
on-air personalities, as well as your fellow
public radio fans, at our annual Listeners’
Reception. Put faces to the voices you hear
on air and join us for lively conversation,
great music, and terrific refreshments. It’s
our way of saying, “Thanks for listening!”
Special thanks to Terry’s Catering and
Oliver Winery for their generous support
of this event.
The Division of Recreational Sports has
joined with the Bloomington community
in organizing the annual Jill Behrman Run
for the End Zone 5K Run/Walk and One
Mile Fun Walk. Proceeds from this event
will benefit the Jill Behrman Emerging
Leader Scholarship and Jill’s House.
Kokomo Community Concert Series
“Bay Street Brassworks”
Sunday, October 29, 7:30 p.m.
kokomocommunityconcerts.org
The Bay Street Brassworks performs pieces
from a variety of genres, including classical,
show tunes, Dixieland, rock, movie songs,
and compositions penned by the group’s
own members. The band’s seemingly endless versatility and educational outreach has
resulted in programming that is consistently
in touch with people of all ages.
Bay Street Brassworks
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Weekday
Saturday
12:01 AM NPR NEWS
12:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
5:00 AM BBC WORLD SERVICE
6:00 AM MORNING EDITION
NPR’S award-winning news program with local and state news at 6:06, 7:06, and 8:06
8:50 AM MARKETPLACE
A daily rundown of financial news from Public Radio International followed by Indiana Business News.
9:04 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
9:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
Featuring new releases and recordings from the WFIU library. (See daily listings for program highlights.)
9:03 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
10:01 AM BBC NEWS
10:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday)
10:58 AM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
11:01 AM NPR NEWS
11:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
11:06 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
11:26 AM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Mondays)
11:27 AM RADIO READER
11:55 AM STARDATE
11:56 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
12:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
12:06 PM FRESH AIR
(ASK THE MAYOR airs Wednesday: NOON EDITION airs Friday.)
1:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
2:01 PM NPR NEWS
2:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
3:01 PM NPR NEWS
3:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
3:10 PM MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday) 3:25 PM COMPOSERS DATEBOOK
(Monday to Wednesday)
3:25 PM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
(Thursday and Friday)
3:30 PM JUST YOU AND ME
WITH JOE BOURNE
4:55 PM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
News coverage and commentary from National Public Radio with local and state news at 5:04 and 5:33.
6:30 PM MARKETPLACE
(Followed by Indiana Business News)
7:00 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
(Fridays)
7:01 PM THE WRITER’S ALMANAC
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
(FRESH AIR on Fridays.) 7:58 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Wednesdays)
8:02 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Fridays)
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS (Fridays)
10:01 PM BBC NEWS
10:08 PM STARDATE
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW (Fridays)
program grid on back cover and daily
See
listings
for details of weeknight programming.
12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:47 AM SATURDAY FEATURE/RADIO PUBLIC
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM CAR TALK
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
11:30 AM STARDATE
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
11:33 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
1:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA
(Start times may vary.)
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
(Start time may be delayed by opera.)
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
10:09 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
10:07 PM STARDATE
11:09 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
12:10 AM JAZZ WITH BOB PARLOCHA
Page 10 / Directions in Sound / October 2006
Sunday
1:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:55 AM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
11:23 AM EARTHNOTE
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
11:46 AM THE POETS WEAVE
11:52 AM STARDATE
11:55 AM LOCAL NEWS
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
3:57 PM EARTHNOTE
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
5:01 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
6:01 PM NPR NEWS
6:06 PM SOUND MEDICINE
6:14 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
7:00 PM PROFILES
8:00 PM SPECIALS (See detailed listings.)
10:01 PM NPR NEWS
10:05 PM STARDATE
10:08 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
11:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
OVERNIGHT
Key to abbreviations.
b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon; c., contralto; cl., clarinet; cond., conductor; cont., continuo; ct., countertenor; db., double bass; ch.,
chamber; E.hn., English horn; ens., ensemble;
fl., flute; gt., guitar; hn., horn; hp., harp; hpsd.,
harpsichord; intro., introduction; instr., instrument; kbd., keyboard; ms., mezzo-soprano;
ob., oboe; orch., orchestra; org., organ; Phil.,
Philharmonic; p., piano; perc., percussion; qt.,
quartet; rec., recorder; sax., saxophone; s.,
soprano; str., string; sym., symphony; t., tenor;
tb., trombone; timp., timpani; tpt., trumpet;
trans., transcribed; var., variations; vla., viola;
vlc., violoncello; vln., violin. Upper case letters
indicate major keys; lower case letters indicate
minor keys.
1 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
“The Blues of Count Basie”
1930s-1950s Big Band Blues
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MUDARRA—Fantasia que contrahaze la
harpa a la manera de Ludovico; Ernesto
Bitetti, gt.
RAVEL— Shéhérazade; Sylvia McNair, s.;
Seiji Ozawa/Boston Sym. Orch.
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Leif Ove Andsnes, p.
SCHUMANN—Four Piano Pieces, Op. 32
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 31 in
A-flat, Op. 110
MOMPOU—Cancion y Danzas No. 1
LISZT—Valse Impromptu
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Good Enough for Jazz”
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Forty-five Minutes from Broadway”
A new recording of the 1906 show by
George M. Cohan.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Program seven in the 1957 CBS Radio Stan
Freberg Show includes “The Lone Analyst,”
“Nose Flute,” “Driving of the Golden
Spike,” and “Banana Boat Song.” Rowen
and Martin present “Cocktail Party” and
“Camp Sunny Sunshine.” Also, This Week
in the Media and Richard Howland Bolton.
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
“Detective Stories”
We’ll hear surprising stories of playing
detective, and find that what really happened
in the past is not always what you’d expect.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
7:00 PM PROFILES
John Harbison (repeat)
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“Making Cities Work, Part I”
In the first episode of this two-part
documentary, architecture critic Devan
Sudjic looks at cutting-edge solutions for
transportation and housing as well as ways
of making cities cleaner and more livable.
9:00 PM JEWISH NEW YEAR: A TIME TO
HEAL
Acclaimed authors, artists, and creative
adventurers affirm the Jewish high holidays
as a time to soothe troubled relationships
with family and friends; to renew
commitments to helping close the rifts
tearing the world apart; and to repair the
torn parts of one self.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
2 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am CAMPRA—LE CARNEAVAL DE
VENISE: “Mes yeux, fermez-vous à jamais”;
Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe Rousset/Les
Talens Lyriques
10am STRAVINSKY—Symphony in C; En
Shao/New Zealand Sym. Orch.
11am SPELLER, F.—Scottish Suite; Frank
Speller, org.
3pm HUME—POETICALL MUSICKE:
Selections; Nima Ben David/Consort de La
Belle Feuille
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
ROSSINI—LA CENERENTOLA
[CINDERELLA]: Overture; Claudio
Abbado/Ch. Orch. of Europe
BACH—Violin Sonata in f, BWV 1018; Duo
Geminiani
GINASTERA—Estancia, Ballet suite, Op.
8a; Michael Tilson Thomas/New World
Sym.
LULLY—ARMIDE: Selections; Veronique
Gens, s.; Christophe Rousset/Les Talens
Lyriques
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“Principal Discoveries: Concerto
Miniatures”
Leon Botstein, cond.; Mitchell Ross, tbn.;
Irina Kessler, hp.; Jenny Hünigen, vln.;
Dimitri Levitas, tpt.; Gershon Dembinsky,
cl.; Richard Paley, bsn.
DAVID—Concertino for Trombone, Op. 4
DOHNANYI—Harp Concertino. Op. 45
ERNST—Concerto pathétique for Violin,
Op. 23
WEINBERG—Trumpet Concerto, Op. 94
STRAUSS, R.—Duett-Concertino for
Clarinet, Bassoon, Strings, and Harp
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Old Bach in the New World”
Without traveling abroad, we can learn about
this repertoire by playing it on American
instruments attuned to Bach’s ideals.
3 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am RACHMANINOFF—FOURTEEN
SONGS, OP. 34: No. 14 “Vocalise”; Sylvia
McNair, s.; David Zinman/Baltimore Sym.
Orch.
10am BACH—Violin Sonata in f, BWV
1018; Duo Geminiani
11am RAMEAU—HIPPOLYTE ET ARICIE:
Selections; Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe
Rousset/Les Talens Lyriques
3pm BRUCH—Adagio on Celtic Themes,
Op. 56; Martin Ostertag, vlc.; Michael
Boder/SWF Sym. Orch. Baden-Baden
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Musical Football”
Ether Game kicks off the new season with a
look at America’s favorite sport.
10:12 PM MARILYN HORNE PRESENTS
“ON WINGS OF SONG”
Tonight we’ll hear baritone Quinn Kelsey
with violinists Velessko Geliev and Janey
Choi, violist Artie Dibble, cellist Ben Wyatt,
and pianist Craig Rutenberg.
11:08 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“New Releases”
Our monthly program of new releases,
featuring music for saxophones by IU
Jacobs School of Music faculty member Don
Freund, a new CD from New York based
string quartet Ethel, and choral music of
Ingram Marshall.
4 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am WOLF—Italian Serenade in G; Avalon
Qt.
10am LECLAIR—SCYLLA ET CLAUCUS:
Selections; Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe
Rousset/Les Talens Lyriques
11am SAINT-SAËNS—”Africa” Fantaise,
Op. 89; Jean-Philippe Collard, p.; André
Previn/Royal Phil. Orch.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
CHOPIN—Waltz in c-sharp, Op. 64, No. 2;
Stephen Kovacevich, p.
MENDELSSOHN—The Hebrides Overture
(“Fingal’s Cave”), Op. 26; Roy Goodman/
Hanover Band
DUFAY—Se la face ay pale; Continens
Paradisi
BINCHOIS—Files a marier; Continens
Paradisi
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 32 in c,
Op. 111; Garrick Ohlsson, p.
8:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY
Michael Tilson Thomas, cond.; Thomas Quasthoff, bar.
REICH—For Strings, with winds and brass
SCHUBERT—DIE SCHÖNE MÜLLERIN,
D. 795: No. 10 “Tränenregen” [Shower of
Tears]
SCHUBERT—Prometheus, D. 674
SCHUBERT—WINTERREISE, D. 911: No.
20 “Der Wegweiser” [The Signpost]
SCHUBERT—SCHWANENGESANG, D.
957: No. 4 “Ständchen” [Serenade]
SCHUBERT—Erlkönig [The Erl-King], D.
328
SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 2 in D, Op. 43
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
MOZART—Mass in c, K. 427; Elisabeth
Marshall and Siân Davies, s.; Kathryn
Leemhuis, ms.; Jordan Bluth, t.; Samuel
Spade, bar.; IU Univ. Singers and Chorale;
William Jon Gray/IU Univ. Orch.
5 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH—GOLDBERG VARIATIONS,
BWV 988: Aria and Variations 1-5; Keith
Jarrett, hpsd.
10am HOLBROOKE—DYLAN, OP. 53:
Prelude; Andrew Penny/Natl. Sym. Orch. of
Ukraine
11am WALTON—Coronation Te Deum;
Scottish Natl. Orch. Chorus; George
McPhee, org.; Alexander Gibson/Scottish
Natl. Orch.
3pm GLUCK—ARMIDE: “Enfin il en ma
puissance”; Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe
Rousset/Les Talens Lyriques
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
SCHUBERT—Sei mir gegrüsst [I Greet You],
D. 741; Ian Bostridge, t.; Julius Drake, p.
BACH—Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G,
BWV 1048; Rinaldo Alessandrini/Concerto
Italiano
IBERT—Cinq Pièces en trio; Indiana
Clarinet Trio
STRAUSS, R.—Tod und Verklärung [Death
and Transfiguration], Op. 24; Donald
Runnicles/Atlanta Sym. Orch.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
Corey Cerovsek and Chee Yun, vln.
PROKOFIEV—Sonata for Two Violins in C,
Op. 56
St. Lawrence Qt.
PUCCINI—Chrysanthemums
Tara Helen O’Connor, fl.; Andres Diaz, vlc.
VILLA-LOBOS—Assobio a Jato [The Jet
Whistle]
Corey Cerovsek, vln.; Wendy Chen, p.
RAVEL—Sonata for Violin and Piano, Op.
Posth.
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 11
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Finalists: Early Music America MedievalRenaissance Competition”
The final round of Early Music America’s
Medieval-Renaissance competition will
happen this October at Corpus Christi
Church in New York City. This week on
Harmonia, we’ll hear a preview, with music
from each finalist.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Mario Venzago, cond.
SCHUMANN—Symphony No.3 in E-flat,
Op. 97 “Rhenish”
Giuliano Sommerhalder, tpt.; Roberto
Minczuk, cond.
HUMMEL—Trumpet Concerto in E-flat
WAGNER—RIENZI: Overture
11:39 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
CHOPIN—Ballade No. 3 in A-flat, Op. 47;
Maurizio Pollini, p.
GABRIELI, A.—Psalm 101, “Domini exaudi
orationem meam”; Huelgas Ens.; Paul Van
Nevel/Netherlands Ch. Choir
6 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BARBER—Summer Music, Op. 31;
Solaris Wind Qt.
10am FAURÉ—PELLÉAS ET MELISANDE,
OP. 80: Suite; Robert Shaw/Atlanta Sym. Orch.
11am MASSENET—MANON: “Allons! il
le faut!”/”Adieu, notre petite table”; Renée
Flemming, s.; Charles Mackerras/London
Phil. Orch.
3pm BACH—Violin Sonata in f, BWV 1018;
Duo Geminiani
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Jon Weber @ Music Institute of Chicago
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Madeleine Peyroux: Half the Perfect
World”
Music from the singer’s followup to her
2004 CD Careless Love, including covers of
songs by Leonard Cohen and Tom Waits.
7 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
CHOPIN—Nocturne in F-sharp, Op. 15,
No. 2; Michel Block, p.
RAMEAU—HIPPOLYTE ET ARICIE:
Selections; Veronique Gens, s.; Christophe
Rousset/Les Talens Lyriques
HANSON—Nymphs and Satyr; Doris
Hall-Gulati, cl.; Holly Blake, bsn.; Daniel
Spalding/Philadelphia Virtuosi Ch.
Page 12 / Directions in Sound / October 2006
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HANDEL—Concerto No. 3 in F for Two
Wind Choirs and Strings, HWV 334; Trevor
Pinnock/English Concert
SCHUMANN, C. (attr. SCHUMANN, R.)—
ZWOLF GEDICHTE, OP. 37: No. 4 “Liebst
du um Schönheit”; Nathalie Stutzmann, a.;
Inger Södergren, p.
SCHUMANN—Kreisleriana, Op. 16;
Evgenia Rubinova, p.
TCHAIKOVSKY—Romeo and Juliet,
Fantasy Overture; Thomas Sanderling/
Novosibirsk Academic Sym. Orch.
Evgenia Rubinova
1:30 PM RICHARD TUCKER OPERA
GALA
In January 2006 the Richard Tucker Music
Foundation celebrated its 31st Annual
Gala in a concert from Alice Tully Hall in
New York. Performers include the Stars of
Tomorrow, recent winners of awards from
the Tucker Foundation.
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Wait Till You Hear This One”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“What’s New”
The periodic look at new music.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Horizons”
We’ll hear some of the musicians that are
turning a new generation on to Celtic
music: flute and whistle player Michael
McGoldrick, singer Emily Smith, and piper
Stuart Cassells.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“1959”
Focusing on a year in which several seminal
jazz masterpieces were released, among them
Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue, Dave Brubeck’s
Time Out, and Charles Mingus’ Mingus Ah
Um.
Charles Mingus
8 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
RAVEL—Menuet antique; Robert
Casadesus, p.
BEETHOVEN—Notturno in D for Viola
and Piano, Op. 42; Roberto Díaz, vla.;
Robert Koenig, p.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Thomas Hampson, bar.; Craig Rutenberg, p.
Hopkinson—My Days Have Been so
Wondrous Free
FOSTER—Hard Times Come Again No
More
COPLAND—The Dodger (A Campaign
Song)
BURLEIGH—Lovely, Dark and Lovely One
WARREN—God Be in my heart
THOMSON—Tiger! Tiger!
BARBER—Sure On This Shining Night, Op.
13, No. 3
PAULUS—A HEARTLAND PORTRAIT: IV.
A Summer Night
IVES—In Flanders Fields
FARWELL—The old man’s love song
STILL—Grief
WHITE—Shenandoah
COPLAND—The Boatman
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With Host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The Music Man”
Robert Preston charms Barbara Cook in
Meredith Willson’s classic musical.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Program eight of the 1957 CBS Radio Stan
Freberg Show including “The Zazaloph
Family,” “Uninterrupted Melody: The Story
of the Good Humor Men,” and more. Also,
the Kaminsky International Kazoo Quartet
and a new contest.
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
“Musical Language”
How does music work? Why does it move
us? We examine the line between language
and music, how the brain processes
sound, and we meet a composer who uses
computers to capture the musical DNA of
dead composers in order to create new work.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Anthony Pizzo (repeat)
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“Making Cities Work, Part II”
In the second hour of this two-part
documentary, architecture critic Devan
Sudjic looks at cutting-edge solutions for
transportation and housing as well as ways
of making cities cleaner and more livable.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
9:00 PM INTELLIGENCE SQUARED
“We Must Tolerate a Nuclear Iran”
Arguing for the motion are foreign policy
expert George Perkovich, Iranian analyst
Karim Sadjadpour, and professor of Middle
East studies Sanam Vakil. Against the
motion are writer and Middle East expert
Patrick Clawson, Iran expert and former
CIA specialist Reuel Marc Gerecht, and
editor and author William Kristol. The
moderator Robert Siegel of NPR’s All
Things Considered.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
9 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BEETHOVEN—Piano Quartet No. 3
in C, WoO 36, No. 3; Renaud Capuçcon,
vln.; Lida Chen, vla.; Gautier Capuçon, vlc.;
Martha Argerich, p.
10am TCHAIKOVSKY—Romeo and Juliet,
Fantasy Overture; Thomas Sanderling/
Novosibirsk Academic Sym. Orch.
11am SPELLER, F.—Prelude on “O Come,
O Come Emmanuel”; Frank Speller, org.
3pm GABRIELI, A.—Psalm 6, “Domine ne
in furore”; Huelgas Ens.; Paul Van Nevel/
Netherland Ch. Choir
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
HONEGGER—Pacific 231: Movement
symphonique No. 1; Leonard Bernstein/New
York Phil.
SOMERVELL—The Gentle Maid; Brian
Horne, t.; Gary Arvin, p.
MENDELSSOHN—Piano Trio No. 2 in
c, Op. 66; Renaud Capuçon, vln.; Gautier
Capuçon, vlc.; Martha Angerich, p.
MOZART—”Mia speranza adorata... Ah,
non sai,” K. 416; Christine Schaefer, s.;
Claudio Abbado/Berlin Phil.
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“Music and the Jews in Germany”
Leon Botstein, cond.; Oleg Stolpner, vlc.;
Michal Shamir and Gal James, s.; Yotam
Cohen, t.; Ramat Gan Chamber Choir;
Kibbutz Artzi Choir ; Tzvi Salton, narr.
SCHOENBERG—Kol Nidre, Op. 39
GOLDSCHMIDT—Cello Concerto
MENDELSSOHN—Symphony No. 2 in
B-flat, Op. 52 “Lobgesang”
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Scandinavian Surprises”
Organs and their music continue as an
integral element in the artistic life of Nordic
countries.
10 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BRUCH—Concerto for Clarinet, Viola
and Orchestra, Op. 88; Karl Schlechta, cl.;
Ekkehard Schloifer, vla.; Michael Boder/
SWF Sym. Orch. Baden-Baden
10am SOMERVELL—The Gentle Maid;
Brian Horne, t.; Gary Arvin, p.
11am MOZART—Piano Sonata in
C, K. 545; Martha Argerich and Piotr
Anderszewski, p.
3pm SHOSTAKOVICH—Jazz Suite No. 1;
Mark Elder/City of Birmingham Sym. Orch.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Forests”
Explore the inner reaches of this romantic
environment with Ether Game.
10:12 PM MARILYN HORNE PRESENTS
“ON WINGS OF SONG”
The mission of the Marilyn Horne
Foundation is to encourage support and
preserve the art of the vocal recital through
the presentation of young artists and
related educational activities. Tonight,
we’ll hear soprano Isabel Leonard with violinists Velessko Geliev and Janey Choi,
violist Artie Dibble, cellist Ben Wyatt, and
pianist Tamara Sanikidze.
11:08 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Henry Brandt”
America’s foremost exponent of acoustic
spatial music, Henry Brandt has created
over 100 works since the 1950s that place
the performers throughout the performance
space instead of confining them to the stage.
We’ll hear two works by Brandt, including
a recent release of music for massed flute
ensemble, and a truly one of a kind work,
Brandt’s “Orbits” for 80 Trombones, voice,
and organ.
11 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SCHIFRIN—Capriccio for Clarinet and
Strings; David Shifrin, cl.; Lalo Schifrin/
Adelaide Sym. Orch.
10am MENDELSSOHN—Piano Trio No. 2
in c, Op. 66; Renaud Capuçon, vln.; Gautier
Capuçon, vlc.; Martha Argerich, p.
11am POULENC— Three Songs; Sylvia
McNair, s.; Roger Vignoles, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
FAURÉ—Elegie, Op. 24; Janos Starker, vlc.;
Walter Susskind/Philharmonia Orch.
STAMITZ, C.—Clarinet Concerto No. 10 in
B-flat; Sabine Meyer, cl.; Iona Brown/Acad.
of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
SCHUBERT—Introduction and Variations
on Trockne Blumen, D. 802; Paula Robison,
fl.; Rudolf Serkin, p.
8:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY
Michael Tilson Thomas, cond.
STRAVINSKY—L’OISEAU DE FEU [The
Firebird]: Infernal Dance, Lullaby, and
Finale
TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 2 in c,
Op. 17 “Little Russian”
STRAVINSKY—Le Sacre du printemps [The
Rite of Spring]
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
HANDEL—Trio Sonata in B-flat, Op. 5,
No. 6, HWV 402; The Brook Street Band
BRAHMS—Piano Quintet in f, Op. 34;
Dora Schwarzberg and Lucy Hall, vln.; Nora Romanoff-Schwarzberg, vla.; Mark
Drobinsky, vlc.; Lilya Zilberstein, p.
SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 14, Op.
135; Karita Mattila, s.; Thomas Quasthoff,
b.; Simon Rattle/Berlin Phil.
12 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SAINT-SAËNS: Piano Concerto No.
2 in g, Op. 22; Jean-Philippe Collard, p.;
André Previn/Royal Phil. Orch.
10am MONTECLAIR—Mort di Lucretia; I
Furiosi
11am COWELL—Suite for Woodwind
Quintet; Solaris Wind Qnt.
3pm INFANTE—Danses andalouses; Karin
Lechner and Sergio Tiempo, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MUSSORGSKY—BORIS GODOUNOV:
Coronation Scene; Valery Gergiev/Kirov
Orch. w/Chorus of the Kirov Opera
PURCELL—THE ECHOING AIR: Music
of Henry Purcell, Part 2; Sylvia McNair, s.;
Christopher Hogwood/Academy of Ancient
Music
HAYDN—Symphony No. 52 in c, Hob.
I:52; Trevor Pinnock/English Concert
SHREKER—Fantastic Overture; Edgar
Seiperbusch/Slovak Phil.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
Fredric Hand, gt.; Daniel Phillips, vln.;
Barry Shiffman, vla.; Alisa Weilerstein, vlc.;
Charles Wadsworth, hpsd.; Matthew Heller,
db.
VIVALDI—Guitar Concerto in D, RV 93
Paula Robison, fl.; Fredric Hand, gt.;
Matthew Heller, db.; Jeremy Denk, hpsd.;
St. Lawrence Qt.
VIVALDI—The Four Seasons (Violin
Concertos, Op. 8, No. 1-4)
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Funerals”
In our day, music performed during funerals
normally has little direct significance for
the deceased. In the Baroque Era, however,
a person of high profile would be honored
with music especially composed in his honor.
This week on Harmonia we’ll look funeral
music of the Baroque.
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 13
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Mario Venzago, cond.
MOZART—Masonic Funeral Music in c, K.
477
MOZART— IDOMENEO, K. 366: Overture
Philip Palermo, vln.; Michael Isaac Strauss, vla.
MOZART—Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat,
K. 364
MOZART—Symphony No. 38 in D, K. 504
“Prague”
11:39 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
GLASS—Company; Takuo Yuasa/Ulster
Orch.
COUPERIN, F.—Audite omnes et
expavescire; Paul Agnew, t.; William
Christie/Les Arts Florissants
13 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HAYDN—Symphony No. 43 in E-flat,
Hob. I:43 “Mercury”; Trevor Pinnock/
English Concert
10am HARRIS—Symphony No. 3; Marin
Alsop/Colorado Sym. Orch.
11am MUSSORGSKY—BORIS
GODOUNOV: Introduction & Polsky;
Evgeny Svetlanov/State Sym. Orch. of Russia
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Charlie Watts and Tim Ries
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Gil Evans on Pacific Jazz”
Recordings from a new reissue (with liner
notes from IU’s David Baker) of arranger Gil
Evans’ two late-1950s Pacific Jazz albums.
14 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
STRAUSS, R.—Serenade in E-flat for Wind
Instruments, Op. 7; Frederick Fennell/
Eastman Wind Ens.
GUASTAVINO—Tres Romances; Martha
Argerich, p.; Mauricio Vallina, p.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MOZART—Rondo in D, K. 485; Alicia de
Larrocha, p.
DVORÁK—Slavonic Dance, Op. 46, No. 4;
Lorin Maazel/Berlin Phil.
SCHIFRIN—Dances Concertantes for
Clarinet and Orchestra; David Shifrin, cl.;
Lalo Schifrin/Adelaide Sym. Orch.
HUME—POETICALL MUSICKE:
Selections; Nima Ben David/Consort de
La Belle Feuille SAINT-SAENS—Piano
Concerto No. 1 in D, Op. 17; Jean-Philippe
Collard, p.; André Previn/Royal Phil. Orch.
Page 14 / Directions in Sound / October 2006
1:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA
Houston Grand Opera
MUSSORGSKY—Boris Godunov
Tugan Sokhiev, cond.; Samuel Ramey
(Boris Godunov); Stefan Margita (Grigory);
Raymond Aceto (Pimen); Joseph Evans
(Prince Shuysky); Robert Pomakov
(Varlaam/Shchelkalov); Jon Kolbet (The
Holy Fool); Taylor Rawley (Fyodor); Heidi
Stober (Xenia); Jennifer Root (Innkeeper/
Nurse); Norman Reinhardt (Missail/Boyarin-attendance)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“What’ll It Be?”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“True Love”
People who experience it think there’s
nothing better.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Thistlepod”
This week: stunning vocals and hot
instrumentals from Dick Gaughan, the
Whistlebinkies, Susan McKeown, Pete
Clark, Kim Robertson, and the debut by
Young Traditional Musician of the Year,
fiddler Shona Mooney.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“The Jazz Workshops”
Experimental 1950s jazz from George Russell
and Hal McKusick.
15 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
SHOSTAKOVICH—THE LIMPID
STREAM: Adagio; Dmitry Yablonsky, vlc.
& cond./Russian Phil. Orch.
SCRIABIN—Piano Sonata No. 2 in g-sharp,
Op. 19 “Sonata-Fantasy”; Boris Giltburg, p.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Phantasm
JENKINS—Fantasy No. 2; An Ayre; An
Almaine; Fantasy No. 3
GIBBONS—Pavan “Lord Salisbury”, MB
18; Peascod Time (The Hunt’s Up), MB 30
MICO—Fancy No. 14; Fancy No. 18
PURCELL—Fantazia 4; Fantazia 12;
Fantazia 5
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With Host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Politics and Poker”
The Broadway spin on next month’s
election.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Program nine of the 1957 CBS Radio Stan
Freberg Show including “A Condensed
Version of the Confidential Magazine Trial,”
“The Abominable Snowman and Fiancée,”
and more. Also, Michael Bentine with
“Tragedy at the National Gallery,” “Film
Extra of the Year.”
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
“Morality”
Where does our sense of right and wrong
come from? We peer inside the brains of
people contemplating moral dilemmas,
watch chimps at a primate research center
share blackberries, observe a playgroup of
toddlers fighting over toys, and tour the
country’s first penitentiary.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Richard Perez (repeat)
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“Inside the World of Google”
Host Mike Embley goes behind the scenes of
Google, examining a mega-corporation that
tries to retain its small company ethos and
original philosophy.
9:00 PM K IS FOR KOECHEL
Mozart scholar Neal Zaslaw and his
daughter, Sarah Zaslaw of Georgia Public
Broadcasting, explore the life of Ludwig von
Köchel, an amateur musician in 19th century
Austria who published the first systematic
index of any European composer’s music.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
16 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SAINT-SAËNS—Fantaisie in E-flat;
Hannes Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
10am BACH—Suite No. 1 in G for Solo
Cello, BWV 1007; Nigel North, lute
11am SPELLER, F.—Toccata, “The Glory of
the Holy Spirit”; Frank Speller, org.
3pm HUME—POETICALL MUSICKE:
Captain Hume’s Lamentation; Nima Ben
David/Consort de La Belle Feuille
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
GAUBERT—Cantabile and Scherzetto;
Hannes Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
MOZART—Horn Concerto No. 4 in E-flat,
K. 495; Dennis Brain, hn.; Herbert von
Karajan/Philharmonia Orch.
WECKMANN—Toccata in d; Duo
Geminiani
DEKHTERYOV, S.—Today all creation;
Elena Fedotova and Larissa Liubashevskaya,
s.; Rita Stavash, a.; Vladimir Mostovoy, t.;
Alexei Buzakin, b.; Nikolai Korniev/Saint
Petersburg Ch. Choir
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 26 in
E-flat, Op. 81a “Das Lebewohl”; Garrick
Ohlsson, p.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“Bruckner and Brahms”
Leon Botstein, cond.; Todd Crow, p.
BRAHMS—Piano Concerto No. 1 in d, Op.
15
BRUCKNER—Symphony No. 7 in E
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Fine Fisk for Furman”
Faculty soloist Charles Tompkins
and campus colleagues celebrate the
inauguration of the Hartness Organ (C.B.
Fisk Opus 121) at Furman University in
Greenville, South Carolina
17 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HANSON—Concerto for Organ, Harp
and String Orchestra; Joseph Jackson, org.;
Jacqueline Pollauf, hp.; Daniel Spalding/
Philadelphia Virtuosi Ch. Orch.
10am WECKMANN—Toccata in d; Duo
Geminiani
11am CHARLIER—Solo de Councours;
Hannes Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
3pm GRIEG—PEER GYNT: “Solveig’s
Song”; Sylvia McNair, s.; Jeffrey Tate/Berlin
Phil.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Theories”
Ether Game attempts to solve music’s
greatest enigmas.
10:12 PM MARILYN HORNE PRESENTS
“ON WINGS OF SONG”
Tonight we’ll hear tenor Alex Richardson
with pianists Thomas Bagwell and Reiko
Uchida.
11:08 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Inside the Piano”
In the late 1920s American composer Henry
Cowell became the first composer to turn
the piano inside out by playing directly on
the strings instead of the keyboard. Since
then, many composers have explored and
developed this technique. We’ll hear several
early works by Cowell, as well as music for
bowed piano by Stephen Scott and a song
cycle by Lukas Foss.
18 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am STRAVINSKY—Symphony in Three
Movements; En Shao/New Zealand Sym.
Orch.
10am SCHMITT, F.—Suite, Op. 133;
Hannes Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
11am HOLBROOKE—The Birds of
Rhiannon, Op. 87; Andrew Penny/Natl.
Sym. Orch. of Ukraine
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
CHOPIN—Fantaisie in f, Op. 49; Evgenia
Rubinova, p.
REBEL—LES ELÉMENS [THE
ELEMENTS]: “Le Cahos” [Chaos];
Christopher Hogwood/Acad. of Ancient
Music
ROSSINI—String Sonata No. 5 in E-flat;
Janos Rolla/Franz Liszt Ch. Orch.
HANSON—Fantasy Variations on a Theme
of Youth, Op. 40; Gabriela Imreh, p.; Daniel
Spalding/Philadelphia Virtuosi Ch. Orch.
8:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY
Michael Tilson Thomas, cond.
MAHLER—Symphony No. 9
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
BACH—Suite No. 4 in E-flat for Solo Cello,
BWV 1010; Nigel North, lute
BEETHOVEN—Egmont, Op. 84; Sylvia
McNair, s.; Will Quadflieg, nar.; Kurt
Masur/New York Phil.
SCHMITT, F.—Suite, Op. 133; Hannes
Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 43 in E-flat, Hob.
I:43 “Mercury”; Trevor Pinnock/English
Concert
19 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HANDEL—Occasional Suite in D;
Trevor Pinnock/English Concert
10am BERNSTEIN—Five Anniversaries;
Solaris Wind Qnt.
11am DUFAY—Bon jour, bon mois;
Continens Paradisi
3pm BITSCH—Four Variations; Hannes
Läubin, tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MOZART—LE NOZZE DI FIGARO, K.
492: Overture; James Levine/Metropolitan
Opera Orch.
WALTON—Belshazzar’s Feast; Sherrill
Milnes, bar.; Scottish Natl. Orch. Chorus;
Scottish Festival Brass Bands; Alexander
Gibson/Scottish Natl. Orch.
TELEMANN—Trio Sonata in g; Ton
Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Soloists
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
Tara Helen O’Connor, fl.; Jeremy Denk, p.
MESSIAEN—Le Merle Noir
Todd Palmer, cl.; Daniel Phillips, vln.; Alisa
Weilerstein, vlc.; Jeremy Denk, p.
MESSIAEN—Quatuor pour la fin du Temps
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Medieval Macabre”
Witchcraft, black cats, and horror – we’ll
provide these and more with spooky, scary,
and strange music from the past. And after
you’ve gotten a good dose of chills, we’ll
give you a treat with a new recording from
Stephen Stubbs and Teatro Lirico.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Mikhail Agrest, cond.
MUSSORGSKY—A Night on Bald
Mountain
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV— SADKO OP.5:
Orchestral Fantasy
Vassily Sinaisky, cond.; Yefim Bronfman, p.
TCHAIKOVSKY—Piano Concerto No.1 in
b-flat, Op.23
11:39 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
DEBUSSY—NOCTURNES: Nuages
[Clouds]; Geoffrey Simon/Philharmonia
Orch.
DUFAY—C’est bien raison [With good
reason]; Tetrakys
20 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MASSENET—MANON: “Allons! il
le faut!”/”Adieu, notre petite table”; Renée
Flemming, s.; Charles Mackerras/London
Phil. Orch.
10am BRUCH—Ave Maria, Op. 61; Martin
Ostertag, vlc.; Michael Boder/SWF Sym.
Orch. Baden-Baden
11am MOZART—LE NOZZE DI
FIGARO, K. 492: “Porgi, amor”; Sylvia
McNair, s.; Neville Marriner/Acad. of St.
Martin-in-the-Fields
3pm WECKMANN—Toccata in d; Duo
Geminiani
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
John Hicks
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Songwriters Singing: Bobby Troup”
The composer-lyricist of “Route 66” singing
his own music and that of others, from a
recent anthology. Also, interpretations of the
Harold Arlen Songbook from WFIU Artist
of the Month Sylvia McNair.
21 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
WOLF—Italian Serenade in G; Avalon Qt.
BITSCH—Four Variations; Hannes Läubin,
tpt.; Lukas Maria Kuen, p.
VERACINI—Ouverture No. 3 in B-flat;
Reinhard Goebel/Musica Antiqua Köln
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
REBEL—Violin Sonata in F; Andrew
Manze, vln.; Richard Egarr, hpsd.; Jaap ter
Linden, vla. da gamba
HAYDN—Symphony No. 51 in B-flat, Hob.
I:51; Trevor Pinnock/English Concert
KOECHLIN—Chansons Bretonnes Book III;
Mats Lidström, vlc.; Bengt Forsberg, p.
TCHAIKOVSKY—Piano Concerto No. 1
in b-flat, Op. 23; Ayako Uehara, p.; Rafael
Frühbeck de Burgos/London Sym. Orch.
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 15
1:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA
Houston Grand Opera
MOZART—The Marriage of Figaro
Patrick Summers, cond.; Oren Gradus
(Figaro); Ana Maria Martinez (The
Countess); Teddy Tahu Rhodes (Count
Almaviva); Isabel Bayrakdarian (Susanna);
Zheng Cao (Cherubino); Dorothy Bryne
(Marcellina); Carlo Lepore (Dr. Bartolo);
Joseph Evans (Don Basilio)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Head Count”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Lost Love”
People who experience it think there’s
nothing worse.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Celtic Women”
Since the rise in popularity of Celtic
compilation albums, many of the most
successful releases have included music by
women artists. This week we will feature
selections from A Woman’s Heart, Her
Infinite Variety: Celtic Women in Music and
Song, and The Chieftains’ collaboration
with Tears of Stone.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Apart From Ra: John Gilmore”
Recordings that Sun Ra tenor saxophonist
John Gilmore made away from his leader,
including music with Andrew Hill, McCoy
Tyner, and Paul Bley.
22 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HANSON—Pastorale for Oboe, Harp,
and Strings; Jonathen Blumenfeld, ob.;
Jacqueline Pollauf, hp.; Daniel Spalding/
Philadelphia Virtuosi Ch. Orch.
HANDEL—Water Music Suite No. 2 in D,
HWV 349; Kevin Mallon/Aradia Ensemble
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
The Beaux Arts Trio
BEETHOVEN—PIANO TRIO IN B-FLAT,
OP. 97 “ARCHDUKE”: I. Allegro Moderato
SHOSTAKOVICH—PIANO TRIO NO. 2
IN e, OP. 67: IV. Allegretto-Adagio
MENDELSSOHN—PIANO TRIO NO. 1
IN D, OP. 49: Andante con moto tranquillo
DVORAK—PIANO TRIO IN e, OP. 90
“DUMKY”: Andante moderato
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The New Season Preview”
What’s planned for Broadway in the 20062007 season.
Page 16 / Directions in Sound / October 2006
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Program ten of the 1957 CBS Radio Stan
Freberg Show including “The Freberg DoIt-Yourself Grand Piano,” “Fortune Cookie
Writer Albert Wong,” and more. Also,
“Amy’s Answering Machine” with Amy
Borkowsky.
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
“Where Am I?”
Mind and body are in constant
communication (neuroscientists call this the
brain-body loop), but this brain-body loop
can get out-of-sync, even broken. Stories of
people whose brains and bodies have lost
each other.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Janis Stockhouse (repeat)
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“The Communications Revolution, Pt. I”
Host Torin Douglas investigates the
incredible changes under way in
communications. Part one of a two part
series.
9:00 PM AMERICAN RADIOWORKS
“Japan’s Pop Power”
For decades, the United States has been
the dominant exporter of pop culture. In
the 21st century, it has a powerful new
competitor in Japan. What’s so cool about
Japan? Will the ancient nation rise again,
this time as the world’s leading exporter of
fantasy?
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
23 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Veni Sancte Spiritus, K.
47; Vox Caeli Sinfonia; Richard Pugsley/
Gloriae Dei Cantores
10am WALTON—Cello Concerto; Ralph
Kirschbaum, vlc.; Alexander Gibson/Scottish
Natl. Orch.
11am MOZART—Church Sonata No. 16
in C, K. 329; Richard Pugsley/Vox Caeli
Sinfonia
3pm OCKEGHEM—Intemerata Dei mater;
Bo Holten/Musica Ficta
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
VERDI—LA TRAVIATA: Prelude to Act I;
Claudio Abbado/Berlin Phil.
KREISLER—Liebesleid & Liebesfreud;
Emilio Colón/Indiana Cello Ens.
MOZART—Regina coeli, K. 108; Vox
Caeli Sinfonia; Richard Pugsley/Gloriae Dei
Cantores
VIOTTI—Cello Concerto in C; Ofra
Harnoy, vlc.; Claudio Scimone/I Solisti
Veneti
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“All Brahms Program”
Leon Botstein, cond.; Daniel Kossov, vln.;
Oleg Stolpner, vlc.
BRAHMS—Academic Festival Overture,
Op. 80
BRAHMS—Concerto in a for Violin and
Cello, Op. 102
BRAHMS—Symphony No. 2 in D, Op. 73
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Walker on the Wild Side”
Popular and unflappable church musician
John Walker shares insights on his world
and an extraordinary modern concerto
which he champions.
24 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SCHUBERT—Introduction and
Variations on Trockne Blumen, D. 802;
Paula Robison, fl.; Rudolf Serkin, p.
10am KREISLER—Liebesleid &
Liebesfreud; Emilio Colón/Indiana Cello
Ens.
11am JOHNSON, ROB.—Sonata Prima; I
Furiosi
3pm HOLBROOKE—THE CHILDREN OF
DON, OP. 56: Overture; Andrew Penny/
Natl. Sym. Orch. of Ukraine
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“On the Nightly News”
Catch up on the latest events with Ether
Game. Film at 11.
10:12 PM MARILYN HORNE PRESENTS
“ON WINGS OF SONG”
“Americans in Paris: The Song Continues . .
. 2006”
Nicole Cabell, s.; Katherine Rohrer, ms.;
William Ferguson, t.; Nathaniel Webster,
bar.; Margot Garrett, Martin Katz, Kenneth
Merrill & Craig Rutenberg, p.; with special
guest Frederica von Stade, ms.
11:08 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Sounds Electric”
There are many examples of electronic
music that replicate acoustic instruments,
but what about acoustic music that emulates
its amped up counterparts? Tonight, works
that emulate electronic sounds with acoustic
instruments, including a recent release by
New York new music ensemble Alarm Will
Sound playing transcriptions of music by
electronic maverick Aphex Twin.
25 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am TCHAIKOVSKY—Piano Concerto No.
1 in b-flat, Op. 23; Ayako Uehara, p.; Rafael
Frühbeck de
Burgos/London Sym. Orch.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
10am MOZART—Litaniae Lauretanae
B.V.M., K. 109; Vox Caeli Sinfonia; Richard
Puglsey/Gloriae Dei Cantores
11am BORODIN—STRING QUARTET
NO. 2 IN D: “Notturno”; Roberto Díaz,
vla.; Robert Koenig, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
FAURE—Romance in B-Flat, Op. 28; Gil
Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.
MOZART—”Ch’io mi scordi di te?... Non
temer, amato bene,” K. 505; Alfred Brendel,
p.; Sylvia McNair, s.; Neville Marriner/Acad.
of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
TELEMANN—Concerto in c for Violin,
Oboe, Strings and Continuo; Mary Utiger,
vln.; Hans-Peter Westermann, ob.; Camerata
Köln
FRANCAIX—Woodwind Quintet; NY
Wind Qnt.
8:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY
Robert Spano, cond.; Emanuel Ax, p.; Mary
Dunleavy, s.; Susanne Mentzer, ms.; John
Mark Ainsley, t.
TURNAGE—Three Screaming Popes
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 27 in Bflat, K. 595
BRITTEN—Spring Symphony, Op. 44
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
CHOPIN—Bolero, Op. 19; Olga Kern, p.
MOZART—Litaniae de venerabili altaris
sacramento, K. 243; Vox Caeli Sinfonia;
Richard Pugsley/Gloriae Dei Cantores
PROKOFIEV—Symphony No. 5 in B-flat,
Op. 100; Thomas Sanderling/Novosibirsk
Academic Sym. Orch.
TELEMANN—Overture in b, TWV 55:h4;
Musica Alta Ripa
26 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HAYDN—Symphony No. 52 in c,
Hob. I:52; Trevor Pinnock/English Concert
10am SAINT-SAËNS—Piano Concerto No.
4 in c, Op. 44; Jean-Philippe Collard, p.;
André Previn/Royal Phil. Orch.
11am GABRIELI, A.—Psalm 31, “Beati
quorum remissae sunt inquitates”; Huelgas
Ens.; Paul Van Nevel/Netherlands Ch. Choir
3pm MOZART—Bertulia Liberata, K. 118;
Vox Caeli Sinfonia; Richard Pugsley/Gloriae
Dei Cantores
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
DONIZETTI—DON PASQUALE: “Cheti,
cheti immantinente”; Thomas Hampson (Dr.
Malatesta); Samuel Ramey (Don Pasquale);
Miguel Gomez-Martinez/Munich Radio
Orch.
BRAHMS—Seven Fantasias, Op 116;
Evgenia Rubinova, p.
ROSETTI, A.—Sinfonia in g; Concerto Köln
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
Todd Palmer, cl.; Charles Wadsworth, p.
MESSAGER—Solo de Concours
St. Lawrence Qt.; Daniel Phillips, vla.; Alisa
Weilerstein, vlc.
STRAUSS—CAPRICCIO, OP. 85: Prelude
(String Sextet)
St. Lawrence Qt.
HAYDN—String Quartet in E-Flat, Op. 33,
No. 2, Hob. III:38 “The Joke”
Paula Robison, piccolo; Tara Helen
O’Connor, fl.; Daniel Phillips, vln.; Charles
Wadsworth, hpsd.; Jessica Grabbe, db.; St.
Lawrence Qt.
BACH—Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G,
BWV 1049
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Politically Correct”
Baroque composers were notorious for
ingratiating themselves to people of power,
wealth, and influence. One way they did this
was to dedicate a composition to a person
who had something they wanted. This week
we’ll look at dedication pages and their
results.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Raymong Leppard, cond.
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS—THE WASPS:
Overture
HOLST—The Planets, Op. 32
11:39 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
RORE—Calami sonum ferentes; Paul Van
Nevel/Huelgas Ens.
DEBUSSY—Images, Book I; György Sebok, p.
27 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Veni Sancte Spiritus, K.
47; Vox Caeli Sinfonia; Richard Pugsley/
Gloriae Dei Cantores
10am FAURÉ— Three Songs; Sylvia
McNair, p.; Roger Vignoles, p.
11am DONIZETTI—DON PASQUALE:
Sinfonia; Myung-Whun Chung/Orch. of the
Natl. Acad. of Saint Cecilia
3pm TCHAIKOVSKY: THE SEASONS, OP.
37b: May (White Nights); Luba Edlina, p.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Billy Childs
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PMAFTERGLOW
“Soulmates: Ben Webster and Joe Zawinul”
Music from an early-1960s studio encounter
between the tenor saxophonist and pianist,
plus new music from Diana Krall.
28 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MOZART—Venite Populi, K. 260; Vox
Caeli Sinfonia; Richard Pugsley/Gloriae Dei
Cantores
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 2 in A,
Op. 2, No. 2; Garrick Ohlsson, p.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
GERSHWIN—Three Preludes; Solaris Wind
Qnt.
SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 1 in f,
Op. 10; Simon Rattle/Berlin Phil.
BACH—Suite No. 1 in G for Solo Cello,
BWV 1007; Nigel North, lute
RESPIGHI—Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite
No. 2; Jesús López-Cobos/Ch. Orch. of
Lausanne
1:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA
Houston Grand Opera
DONIZETTI—Don Pasquale
Patrick Summers, cond.; John Del Carlo
(Don Pasquale); Heidi Stober (Norina);
Norman Reinhardt Ernesto); Brian
Leerhuber (Dr. Malatesta)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“The Wooden Postcard”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Scared Me!”
Thinking about Halloween.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“A Celtic Tale”
Fiona Ritchie narrates “The Legend of
Deirdre,” a tale from Ireland’s ancient cycles
of mythologies. The narration is set to an
original score by Michael and Jeff Danna,
and includes performances on Celtic harp,
flute, fiddle, whistle, accordion, mandolin,
and Scottish and Irish bagpipes.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Down On the 90th Floor: Dick and Kiz
Harp”
The music of a lost legend piano-and-vocal
duo who ran a nightclub in Dallas at the end
of the 1950s; including an interview with
Bruce Collier, the man who recorded them.
29 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
WAGNER—TRISTAN AND ISOLDE:
Prelude and Liebestod; Christine Brewer, s.;
Donald Runnicles/Atlanta Sym. Orch.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Guarneri String Quartet
MOZART—STRING QUARTET NO. 19
IN C, K. 465 “DISSONANT”: Adagio;
Allegro
RAVEL—STRING QUARTET IN F: Allegro
moderato (Très doux); Vif et agité
DVORÁK—STRING QUARTET NO.
11 IN C, OP. 61: Poco adagio e molto
cantabile; Finale. Vivace
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With Host Peter Schickele
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 17
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The Great Ziegfeld”
The producer who made Broadway
expensive.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Program eleven of the 1957 CBS Radio Stan
Freberg Show includes “College Footballer
Francis Sharmley,” “The Monkey Song,”
and more. Also, Wayne and Shuster’s
“History of the Automobile.”
4:00 PM RADIO LAB
“Space”
America took a bold step in conquering
outer space when it landed a man on the
moon in 1969. But since then, the romance
of space exploration has been tempered by
reality. We chart the path from then to now.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Stephen L. Ferguson
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“The Communications Revolution, Pt. II”
Host Torin Douglas investigates
the incredible changes underway in
communications. Part two of a two part
series.
9:00 PM INTELLIGENCE SQUARED
“Freedom of Expression Must Include the
License to Offend”
Arguing for the motion are Paris Review
editor Philip Gourevitch, writer Christopher
Hitchens, and editorial cartoonist Signe
Wilkinson. Arguing against the motion
are scholar David Cesarani, Daisy Khan,
and law professor Mari Matsuda. The
moderator is Jeffrey Toobin.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
30 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am GIBBONS—The Cries of London;
Fretwork; Paul Hillier/Theatre of Voices
10am HUME—CAPTAIN HUME’S
MUSICAL HUMORS: Life and Death;
Nima Ben David/Consort de La Belle Feuille
11am STRAVINSKY—Symphonies of Wind
Instruments; En Shao/New Zealand Sym.
Orch.
3pm MOZART—Misera, dove son!...Ah!
non son io che parlo, K. 369; Sylvia McNair,
s.; Neville Marriner/Acad. of St. Martin-inthe-Fields
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
GIBBONS—Fantasia a 4, for the viols;
Fretwork
MOZART—Rondo in a, K. 511; Jonathan
Biss, p.
FAURÉ—PELLÉAS ET MELISANDE, OP.
80: Suite; Robert Shaw/Atlanta Sym. Orch.
Page 18 / Directions in Sound / October 2006
BEETHOVEN—Horn Sonata in F, Op. 17;
Kristin Pederson Thelander, natural hn.;
Carol lei Post, fp.
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“American Originals”
Leon Botstein, cond.; Daniel Fradkin, vla.
d’amore
LOEFFLER—La mort de Tintagiles, Op. 6
HINDEMITH—Nobilissima Visione
COPLAND—Statements
COPLAND—Appalachian Spring
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
“A Lively Tradition”
A collection of scores, some new, some
newer, all by American composers.
31 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH—Suite No. 1 in G for Solo
Cello, BWV 1007; Bruno Cocset, vlc.
10am MOZART—Rondo in a, K. 511;
Jonathan Biss, p.
Jonathan Biss
11am WEELKES—The Cries of London;
Fretwork; Paul Hillier/Theatre of Voices
3pm PAGANINI—VIOLIN CONCERTO
NO. 2 IN b, OP. 7: Rondo a la Clochette;
Roberto Díaz, vla.; Robert Koenig, p.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Behind the Mask”
Ether Game asks: “Who’s behind that mask?”
10:12 PM TUESDAY EVENING VOCAL
MUSIC
SCHOENBERG—GURRELIEDER: Parts
Two and Three; Choir of St. Hedwigs
Cathedral, Berlin; State Music Society
of Düsseldorf; Susan Dunn, s.; Brigitte
Fassbaender, ms.; Siegfried Jerusalem and
Peter Haage, t.; Hermann Becht, bar.; Hans
Hotter, narr.; Riccardo Chailly/Radio Sym.
Orch. Berlin
11:00 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Something to See, Pt. I”
In the 1950s some composers began to
abandon the limitations of Western musical
notation, developing new systems of graphic
notation, the results of which were often so
visually interesting that the printed page was
exhibited in art galleries separately from the
sonic result. We’ll listen to examples from
this genre, beginning with early examples by
Earle Brown, Christian Wolff, John Cage,
and others.
WFIU Future Fund
Radio broadcasting is undergoing rapid
change. One of WFIU’s missions is to keep
up with change, ensuring the best possible
service to both our current listeners and
listeners of the future.
This future takes us beyond today’s
broadcasting, into a world where anyone,
anywhere will be able to access our programs at any time. These changes require
a major investment in technology that go
well beyond the resources we generate
through our annual membership program
that supports our daily operation.
To financially support these new initiatives, we created the WFIU Future Fund.
Thoughtful gifts to the Fund have come
in many forms—from direct cash gifts of
support, to stock, retirement, insurance
policies, and estate plans. The Future Fund
Charter Donors are listed below, with
WFIU’s gratitude.
We welcome your participation in
helping WFIU stay in the broadcasting
forefront. Listeners may support the WFIU
Future Fund, or any number of giving and
naming opportunities beginning at $1,000
that permit individuals and businesses to
become involved beyond an annual membership or underwriting gift.
To learn how you can become involved,
contact Judy Witt, WFIU/WTIU Major
and Planned Gifts Officer, at jwitt@
indiana.edu or 812-855-2935.
We would like to express our gratitude
to the 2004–2005 Future Fund Charter
Donors:
Becky Cape
Fred and Sandra Churchill
Anna Marie and Matthew Dalle-Ave
Kenneth Gros Louis
Harold and Dorothy Hammel
Diane M. Hawes
Ross Jennings
Stephen and Diane Keucher
Christina Kuzmych
Bob and Allison Lendman
Jeanette Calkins Marchant
Celeste and Mike McGregor
Perry and Nancy Metz
William Murphy
John and Susan Nash
James and Barbara Randall
Frederick Risinger
Marie-Louise and David Smith
Maurice and Linda Smith
Ron and Sally Stephenson
Rex and Nancy Stockton
Mary and Joseph Walker
Lee and Judy Witt
Eva Zogorski
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
W IU
wfiu.indiana.edu
PROGRAMMING AND
OPERATING SUPPORT
Indiana University
CORPORATE SILVER
Bloomington Iron and Metal, Inc.
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity—
Indiana University
PYNCO, Inc.—Bedford
CORPORATE BENEFACTORS
Brown Hill Nursery of Columbus
CINERGY, Inc.—
Bloomington Region
Clay City Pharmacy—Clay City
Dr. David Southwick, Hand and Microvascular Surgeon of
Terre Haute
KP Pharmaceutical Technology
Kronodynamics, LLC,
Drs. Michael Kane and
Polly Lybrook
Pinnacle Properties
Tipton Lakes Athletic Club—
Columbus
World Arts, Inc.—Spencer
CORPORATE SPONSORS
Bloomington Podiatry Center and
Bloomington Optometry—
Dr. Michael Hoffman and
Dr. Miccah Hoffman
Bloomington Veterinary Hospital
Brown County Hotels and
Restaurants
• Nashville House,
• Brown County Inn,
• The Ordinary and
• The Seasons
Dermatology Center of Indiana —Drs. Byrne, McTigue and Reeck
Designscape Horticultural
Services, Inc.
Drs. David J. Howell and
Timothy A. Pliske, DDS of Bloomington and Bedford
HobNob Corner Restaurant —Nashville
ISU/May Insurance Agency
Strategic Development Group, Inc.
Unity Physicians Group
CORPORATE MEMBERS
Beacon X-Ray Testing, Inc.—
Terre Haute
Dr. Phillip Crooke—
Obstetrics and Gynecology
JB’s Salvage, Inc.—Scrap Metal Recycler
Kappa Kappa Kappa Inc.
G. C. Mangum Construction—
Nashville
Smart and Johnson Title Company —Columbus
World Wide Automotive
PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS
4th Street Festival of the Arts
and Crafts
Akento Technology Sourcing Inc.
Andrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.
Argentum Jewelry
Bahá’í Faith
Baugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail Services
Beacon X-ray Testing, Inc.
Bicycle Garage
BKD
Bloomingfoods
Bloomington Area Birth Services
Bloomington Dental Group
Bloomington Pet Pals
Bloomington Worldwide Friendship
Brian Lappin Real Estate
South Dunn Street Project
Brown County Winery
Bunger and Robertson, Attorneys at Law
By Hand Gallery
Canine Companions
Caveat Emptor Books
Children’s Village
Clay City Pharmacy
Columbus Area Arts Council
Columbus Container Inc.
Columbus Museum of Art & Design
Columbus Optical
Commercial Service of Bloomington
Compass Events
Crawlspace Doctor
Day & Carter Mortuary, Bedford
Dell Brothers
DePauw University
Elements
Falafels
First United Methodist Church
The Foot & Ankle Center
Fossil Rain
Four Seasons Retirement
Game Preserve
General Hotels
Gilbert Construction
Goods for Cooks
Greene Acres Farm of Aden, Inc.
Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.
Hamilton Facial Plastic Surgery
Hair International
The Herald-Times
Heritage Fund of Bartholomew County
Hills O’Brown Realty
Hills O’Brown Property Management
Home Instead Senior Care
Dr. Howard & Associates
Indiana State Attorney General
Indiana State
Secretary of State Office
Indianapolis Arts Center
Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Opera
The Irish Lion Restaurant and Pub
ISU/The May Agency
IU Art Museum
IU Auditorium
IU Bloomington Continuing Studies
IU Bookstore
IU Credit Union
IU Department of Theatre & Drama
IU Division of Recreational Sports
IU Division of Residential Programs & Services
IU Honors Program in Foreign Languages
IU Jacobs School of Music
IU Kelley School of Business—
Indianapolis
IU Kokomo Theater & Drama
IU Medical Sciences Program
IU Press
IU Printing Services
IU School of Continuing Studies
IU School of Optometry
IU University Information Technology Services
IU Writer’s Conference
J. L. Waters & Company
Kern Financial Group
The Kinsey Institute
Kirby-Risk Supply Co.
Laughing Planet Café
L. B. Stant and Associates
Mallor, Clendening, Grodner & Bohrer, Attorneys at Law
Meadowood Retirement Community
Medicaid Solutions
Midwest Counseling Center
N. R. Hiller Design
The Nature Conservancy of Indiana
O’Malia’s Food Market
Old National Bank
Oliver Winery
Owen County Community Foundation, Inc.
Plumb, Inc.
Plus 5 Homeowners Guarantee
Prima Gallery
ProsLink
Pygmalion’s Art Supplies
Relish
Ron Plecher—REMAX
Dr. Byron Rutledge, DDS
Shawnee Summer Theatre
Smithville Telephone Company
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
Square Home Improvement
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church
Stonebridge Health Campus
Taylor & Webb,
American Portfolios, Inc.
Terry’s Banquets and Catering
Tina’s Cuisine & Catering
Trojan Horse Restaurant
Twisted Limb Paperworks
U-Club Restaurant & Bar
Vance Music Center
WonderLab
World Wide Automotive Service
Yarns Unlimited
These community minded
businesses support locally
produced programs on
WFIU.
We thank them for their
partnership and encourage
you to thank and support
them.
Local Program
Production Support
Brian Lappin Real Estate
(Ask the Mayor)
(Ether Game)
(Noon Edition)
(Hometown)
Closets Too!
(Noon Edition)
Laughing Planet
(Night Lights)
Lennie’s
(Just You and Me)
The Bloomington
Brewing Pub
(Just You and Me)
Pizza Express
(Just You and Me)
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
(Night Lights)
Nationally Syndicated
Program Support
Nakamichi Foundation—
American Early Music Series
(Harmonia)
The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute
(Hometown)
Office of the IU Provost, Bloomington
(A Moment of Science)
PYNCO, Inc., Bedford
(Harmonia)
October 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 19

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